Tejas Networks revenue crashes as orders stall
NEW DELHI, April 17 -- Tata group-backed Tejas Networks has acknowledged that its financial performance was "quite disappointing" in FY26 as the completion of the initial 4G project at state-owned Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd (BSNL), along with large order delays, led to a sharp revenue shortfall and pushed the company into losses.
The telecom gear maker reported a net loss of Rs.909 crore for FY26, compared with a Rs.447 crore profit in the previous year, while revenue from operations fell by over eight times to Rs.1,103 crore. The company announced its March quarter and full-year earnings after market hours on Wednesday.
Shares of Tejas Networks slumped nearly 6% in early deals on Thursday to Rs.423.50 apiece, reflecting investor concerns over mounting inventories, stretched receivables and the company's path back to profitability.
During the earnings call, an investor also flagged the sharp fall in the stock from its lifetime high of Rs.1,495 in June 2024. The company, however, expressed confidence in its long-term prospects.
"Yes the results have been quite disappointing but at the same time we are positive about our future based on which we have made substantial investments during the year," said Arnob Roy, executive director and chief operating officer of Tejas Networks, in the earnings call.
"This has been a year of transition for us after the execution of the massive BSNL project in FY25 which gave us a significant amount of revenues and we needed a runway in FY26 to consolidate and transition our business beyond BSNL. Several large customer projects that we were actually planning for both for wireline and wireless products got delayed," Roy added.
The company has deployed 4G network across about 100,000 sites for state-owned BSNL, with the original order valued at Rs.7,492 crore, according to an earlier company release.
Roy has now been appointed managing director and chief executive officer for a two-year period effective 15 April 2026 to 3 August 2028, subject to shareholder approval. The position had been vacant for about four quarters following the resignation of the previous CEO, Anand Athreya.
On expectations of a break-even or return to profitability in FY27, Roy said, "That's the goal.FY26 has been a year of investment and (in) FY27 we expect to see far better financial results."
Even as the company has an order book of Rs.1,514 crore, investors and analysts have raised concerns over its unsold inventory, which stood at Rs.2,438 crore at the end of March.
For over a year, the Bengaluru-based firm has been awaiting BSNL's Rs.1,526 crore "add-on" order for 18,685 additional sites, forcing it to hold elevated inventory levels.
"Active discussions are still going on with the BSNL team on the sites on which they have to have the 4G and the configurations," Sanjay Malik, chief strategy and business officer of the company, said during the call.
The company said the 4G/5G radios are not unique to BSNL and can be repurposed for other global customers for private networks, even though a significant portion is expected to go towards the BSNL add-on.
Tejas, which competes with the likes of Nokia and Ericsson, is banking on international expansion through strategic partnerships, an AI-driven network upgrade "super cycle," and execution of delayed domestic projects such as the BSNL add-on order for 4G and potential 5G upgrades to drive a turnaround....
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